Deranged | |
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Directed by |
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Screenplay by | Alan Ormsby |
Produced by | Tom Karr |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Jack McGowan |
Music by | Carl Zittrer |
Distributed by | American International Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 82 minutes |
Countries | Canada United States |
Language | English |
Budget | US$200,000[1] |
Deranged (also known as Deranged: Confessions of a Necrophile)[1] is a 1974 psychological horror film directed by Alan Ormsby and Jeff Gillen, and starring Roberts Blossom. Its plot, loosely based on the crimes of Ed Gein, follows Ezra Cobb, a middle-aged man in a rural Midwestern community who begins a string of serial murders and grave robberies after the death of his mother, a religious fanatic who raised him to be a misogynist. Though based on Gein, the film's title is misleading since Gein never experimented with necrophilia (although a necrophile is also defined as having "an obsessive fascination with death and corpses.")
Funded by an American concert promoter on a small budget, the production took place in Oshawa, Ontario in the winter of 1973, with a largely Canadian cast and crew. The film premiered in Los Angeles on March 20, 1974.
The film had disappeared since its release in 1974; however, it was rediscovered in Florida in the mid-1990s and was released into home video by distributor America International Pictures’ parent company Metro Goldwyn Mayer.[2]
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